I. OVERVIEW
In the wake of the September 11 terrorist
attacks on the USA, attention was drawn to the age-old, secretive, and
globe-spanning banking system developed in Asia and known as "Hawala"
(to change, in Arabic). It is based on a short term, discountable,
negotiable, promissory note (or bill of exchange) called "Hundi". While
not limited to Moslems, it has come to be identified with "Islamic
Banking".
Islamic Law (Sharia'a) regulates commerce and finance in
the Fiqh Al Mua'malat, (transactions amongst people). Modern Islamic
banks are overseen by the Shari'a Supervisory Board of Islamic Banks and
Institutions ("The Shari'a Committee").
The Shi'a "Islamic Laws
according to the Fatawa of Ayatullah al Uzama Syed Ali al-Husaini
Seestani" has this to say about Hawala banking:
"2298. If a debtor
directs his creditor to collect his debt from the third person, and the
creditor accepts the arrangement, the third person will, on completion
of all the conditions to be explained later, become the debtor.
Thereafter, the creditor cannot demand his debt from the first debtor."
The
prophet Muhammad (a cross border trader of goods and commodities by
profession) encouraged the free movement of goods and the development of
markets. Numerous Moslem scholars railed against hoarding and harmful
speculation (market cornering and manipulation known as "Gharar").
Moslems were the first to use promissory notes and assignment, or
transfer of debts via bills of exchange ("Hawala"). Among modern banking
instruments, only floating and, therefore, uncertain, interest payments
("Riba" and "Jahala"), futures contracts, and forfeiting are frowned
upon. But agile Moslem traders easily and often circumvent these
religious restrictions by creating "synthetic Murabaha (contracts)"
identical to Western forward and futures contracts. Actually, the only
allowed transfer or trading of debts (as distinct from the underlying
commodities or goods) is under the Hawala.
"Hawala" consists of
transferring money (usually across borders and in order to avoid taxes
or the need to bribe officials) without physical or electronic transfer
of funds. Money changers ("Hawaladar") receive cash in one country, no
questions asked. Correspondent hawaladars in another country dispense an
identical amount (minus minimal fees and commissions) to a recipient
or, less often, to a bank account. E-mail, or letter ("Hundi") carrying
couriers are used to convey the necessary information (the amount of
money, the date it has to be paid on) between Hawaladars. The sender
provides the recipient with code words (or numbers, for instance the
serial numbers of currency notes), a digital encrypted message, or
agreed signals (like handshakes), to be used to retrieve the money. Big
Hawaladars use a chain of middlemen in cities around the globe.
But
most Hawaladars are small businesses. Their Hawala activity is a
sideline or moonlighting operation. "Chits" (verbal agreements)
substitute for certain written records. In bigger operations there are
human "memorizers" who serve as arbiters in case of dispute. The Hawala
system requires unbounded trust. Hawaladars are often members of the
same family, village, clan, or ethnic group. It is a system older than
the West. The ancient Chinese had their own "Hawala" - "fei qian" (or
"flying money"). Arab traders used it to avoid being robbed on the Silk
Road. Cheating is punished by effective ex-communication and "loss of
honour" - the equivalent of an economic death sentence. Physical
violence is rarer but not unheard of. Violence sometimes also erupts
between money recipients and robbers who are after the huge quantities
of physical cash sloshing about the system. But these, too, are rare
events, as rare as bank robberies. One result of this effective social
regulation is that commodity traders in Asia shift hundreds of millions
of US dollars per trade based solely on trust and the verbal commitment
of their counterparts.
Hawala arrangements are used to avoid
customs duties, consumption taxes, and other trade-related levies.
Suppliers provide importers with lower prices on their invoices, and get
paid the difference via Hawala. Legitimate transactions and tax evasion
constitute the bulk of Hawala operations. Modern Hawala networks
emerged in the 1960's and 1970's to circumvent official bans on gold
imports in Southeast Asia and to facilitate the transfer of hard earned
wages of expatriates to their families ("home remittances") and their
conversion at rates more favourable (often double) than the
government's. Hawala provides a cheap (it costs c. 1% of the amount
transferred), efficient, and frictionless alternative to morbid and
corrupt domestic financial institutions. It is Western Union without the
hi-tech gear and the exorbitant transfer fees.
Unfortunately,
these networks have been hijacked and compromised by drug traffickers
(mainly in Afganistan and Pakistan), corrupt officials, secret services,
money launderers, organized crime, and terrorists. Pakistani Hawala
networks alone move up to 5 billion US dollars annually according to
estimates by Pakistan's Minister of Finance, Shaukut Aziz. In 1999,
Institutional Investor Magazine identified 1100 money brokers in
Pakistan and transactions that ran as high as 10 million US dollars
apiece. As opposed to stereotypes, most Hawala networks are not
controlled by Arabs, but by Indian and Pakistani expatriates and
immigrants in the Gulf. The Hawala network in India has been brutally
and ruthlessly demolished by Indira Gandhi (during the emergency regime
imposed in 1975), but Indian nationals still play a big part in
international Hawala networks. Similar networks in Sri Lanka, the
Philippines, and Bangladesh have also been eradicated.
The OECD's Financial Action Task Force (FATF) says that:
"Hawala
remains a significant method for large numbers of businesses of all
sizes and individuals to repatriate funds and purchase gold.... It is
favoured because it usually costs less than moving funds through the
banking system, it operates 24 hours per day and every day of the year,
it is virtually completely reliable, and there is minimal paperwork
required."
(Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development
(OECD), "Report on Money Laundering Typologies 1999-2000," Financial
Action Task Force, FATF-XI, February 3, 2000, at http://www.oecd.org/fatf/pdf/TY2000_en.pdf )
Hawala
networks closely feed into Islamic banks throughout the world and to
commodity trading in South Asia. There are more than 200 Islamic banks
in the USA alone and many thousands in Europe, North and South Africa,
Saudi Arabia, the Gulf states (especially in the free zone of Dubai and
in Bahrain), Pakistan, Malaysia, Indonesia, and other South East Asian
countries. By the end of 1998, the overt (read: tip of the iceberg)
liabilities of these financial institutions amounted to 148 billion US
dollars. They dabbled in equipment leasing, real estate leasing and
development, corporate equity, and trade/structured trade and
commodities financing (usually in consortia called "Mudaraba").
While
previously confined to the Arab peninsula and to south and east Asia,
this mode of traditional banking became truly international in the
1970's, following the unprecedented flow of wealth to many Moslem
nations due to the oil shocks and the emergence of the Asian tigers.
Islamic banks joined forces with corporations, multinationals, and banks
in the West to finance oil exploration and drilling, mining, and
agribusiness. Many leading law firms in the West (such as Norton Rose,
Freshfields, Clyde and Co. and Clifford Chance) have "Islamic Finance"
teams which are familiar with Islam-compatible commercial contracts.
II. HAWALA AND TERRORISM
Recent
anti-terrorist legislation in the US and the UK allows government
agencies to regularly supervise and inspect businesses that are
suspected of being a front for the ''Hawala'' banking system, makes it a
crime to smuggle more than $10,000 in cash across USA borders, and
empowers the Treasury secretary (and its Financial Crimes Enforcement
Network - FinCEN) to tighten record-keeping and reporting rules for
banks and financial institutions based in the USA. A new inter-agency
Foreign Terrorist Asset Tracking Center (FTAT) was set up. A 1993
moribund proposed law requiring US-based Halawadar to register and to
report suspicious transactions may be revived. These relatively radical
measures reflect the belief that the al-Qaida network of Osama bin Laden
uses the Hawala system to raise and move funds across national borders.
A Hawaladar in Pakistan (Dihab Shill) was identified as the financier
in the attacks on the American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998.
But the USA is not the only country to face terrorism financed by Hawala networks.
A
few months ago, the Delhi police, the Indian government's Enforcement
Directorate (ED), and the Military Intelligence (MI) arrested six Jammu
Kashmir Islamic Front (JKIF) terrorists. The arrests led to the exposure
of an enormous web of Hawala institutions in Delhi, aided and abetted,
some say, by the ISI (Inter Services Intelligence, Pakistan's security
services). The Hawala network was used to funnel money to terrorist
groups in the disputed Kashmir Valley.
Luckily, the common
perception that Hawala financing is paperless is wrong. The transfer of
information regarding the funds often leaves digital (though heavily
encrypted) trails. Couriers and "contract memorizers", gold dealers,
commodity merchants, transporters, and moneylenders can be apprehended
and interrogated. Written, physical, letters are still the favourite
mode of communication among small and medium Hawaladars, who also
invariably resort to extremely detailed single entry bookkeeping. And
the sudden appearance and disappearance of funds in bank accounts still
have to be explained. Moreover, the sheer scale of the amounts involved
entails the collaboration of off shore banks and more established
financial institutions in the West. Such flows of funds affect the local
money markets in Asia and are instantaneously reflected in interest
rates charged to frequent borrowers, such as wholesalers. Spending and
consumption patterns change discernibly after such influxes. Most of the
money ends up in prime world banks behind flimsy business facades.
Hackers in Germany claimed (without providing proof) to have infiltrated
Hawala-related bank accounts.
The problem is that banks and
financial institutions - and not only in dodgy offshore havens ("black
holes" in the lingo) - clam up and refuse to divulge information about
their clients. Banking is largely a matter of fragile trust between bank
and customer and tight secrecy. Bankers are reluctant to undermine
either. Banks use mainframe computers which can rarely be hacked through
cyberspace and can be compromised only physically in close co-operation
with insiders. The shadier the bank - the more formidable its digital
defenses. The use of numbered accounts (outlawed in Austria, for
instance, only recently) and pseudonyms (still possible in Lichtenstein)
complicates matters. Bin Laden's accounts are unlikely to bear his
name. He has collaborators.
Hawala networks are often used to
launder money, or to evade taxes. Even when employed for legitimate
purposes, to diversify the risk involved in the transfer of large sums,
Hawaladars apply techniques borrowed from money laundering. Deposits are
fragmented and wired to hundreds of banks the world over ("starburst").
Sometimes, the money ends up in the account of origin ("boomerang").
Hence
the focus on payment clearing and settlement systems. Most countries
have only one such system, the repository of data regarding all banking
(and most non-banking) transactions in the country. Yet, even this is a
partial solution. Most national systems maintain records for 6-12
months, private settlement and clearing systems for even less.
Yet,
the crux of the problem is not the Hawala or the Hawaladars. The
corrupt and inept governments of Asia are to blame for not regulating
their banking systems, for over-regulating everything else, for not
fostering competition, for throwing public money at bad debts and at
worse borrowers, for over-taxing, for robbing people of their life
savings through capital controls, for tearing at the delicate fabric of
trust between customer and bank (Pakistan, for instance, froze all
foreign exchange accounts two years ago). Perhaps if Asia had reasonably
expedient, reasonably priced, reasonably regulated, user-friendly banks
- Osama bin Laden would have found it impossible to finance his
mischief so invisibly.
Sam Vaknin is the author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism
Revisited" and "After the Rain - How the West Lost the East". He is a
columnist in "Central Europe Review", United Press International (UPI)
and ebookweb.org and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe
categories in The Open Directory, Suite101 and searcheurope.com. Until
recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government of
Macedonia.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/26679
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